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authorMike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org>2014-08-08 09:40:25 +0900
committerRiku Voipio <riku.voipio@linaro.org>2014-08-22 15:06:33 +0300
commitf17f4989fa193fa8279474c5462289a3cfe69aea (patch)
tree70bf13634f0b10c3a3c2d9ed85fc3861aede7ac1 /net
parentc065976f2bca9b87bc699c5fdeb4d3ff1299b8c4 (diff)
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linux-user: fix readlink handling with magic exe symlink
The current code always returns the length of the path when it should be returning the number of bytes it wrote to the output string. Further, readlink is not supposed to append a NUL byte, but the current snprintf logic will always do just that. Even further, if you pass in a length of 0, you're suppoesd to get back an error (EINVAL), but the current logic just returns 0. Further still, if there was an error reading the symlink, we should not go ahead and try to read the target buffer as it is garbage. Simple test for the first two issues: $ cat test.c int main() { char buf[50]; size_t len; for (len = 0; len < 10; ++len) { memset(buf, '!', sizeof(buf)); ssize_t ret = readlink("/proc/self/exe", buf, len); buf[20] = '\0'; printf("readlink(/proc/self/exe, {%s}, %zu) = %zi\n", buf, len, ret); } return 0; } Now compare the output of the native: $ gcc test.c -o /tmp/x $ /tmp/x $ strace /tmp/x With what qemu does: $ armv7a-cros-linux-gnueabi-gcc test.c -o /tmp/x -static $ qemu-arm /tmp/x $ qemu-arm -strace /tmp/x Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: Riku Voipio <riku.voipio@linaro.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'net')
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